Christine Murphy

4.8K posts

Christine Murphy

Christine Murphy

@MurphyM47249

Katılım Ağustos 2025
31 Takip Edilen83 Takipçiler
Republicans against Trump
Republicans against Trump@RpsAgainstTrump·
Washington Post: FBI Director Kash Patel is pressing to release a decade-old investigative file involving Rep. Eric Swalwell and a suspected Chinese intelligence operative, recently dispatching agents in the bureau’s San Francisco office to quickly redact the files before they are released publicly despite no evidence of wrongdoing by Swalwell The potential release is part of the Trump administration’s aggressive push to investigate Swalwell, a vocal critic of President Donald Trump and a leading Democratic candidate for California governor, according to the people familiar with the effort. It is highly unusual for the FBI to release case files tied to a probe that did not result in criminal charges.
Republicans against Trump tweet mediaRepublicans against Trump tweet media
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‏جمال‏ الحاسي
Kash Patel is doing the job the Deep State refused to do: dragging old China-spy files into the sunlight on Eric Swalwell. A sitting Congressman with documented ties to a suspected Chinese intelligence asset? That’s not a “nothingburger” — that’s a national security bomb the media buried for years. Now the same anti-Trump crew that obsessed over Russia collusion screams “unusual!” the second their guy might get exposed. Release the files. All of them. Transparency isn’t revenge — it’s duty
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Ignacio Couce
Ignacio Couce@CouceIgnacio·
@AdamKinzinger @TheDemocrats, and their RINO enablers, don’t want a king. They want a central government—perpetually controlled by them— powerful enough to impose their will on everybody, because the regime knows what’s best for everyone. See the difference? 🤡
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Christine Murphy
Christine Murphy@MurphyM47249·
@MarkWEccleston @Acyn He is so hated by his family. Makes me sick hearing him use their names in vein all in a way to trump up trump. Sick
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Acyn
Acyn@Acyn·
RFK Jr.: I think if my father and uncle were around today, they would be making the same kinds of choices that President Trump is making—on Iran, on Ukraine, and on trying to lift up the middle class. I grew up in a Democratic Party where Democrats owned 30% of the wealth and Republicans owned 70%. Today, it’s exactly the inverse.
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Wu Tang is for the Children
You know MAGA is dead when this is the scene right now at The Villages in Florida for No Kings
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Christine Murphy retweetledi
Aaron Parnas
Aaron Parnas@AaronParnas·
NEW: Organizers have confirmed to me that more than 8 million people attended today’s no Kings Day protest—one of the largest ever.
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Christine Murphy
Christine Murphy@MurphyM47249·
@Acyn Ahh yes he’s going that with his health secretary. The worms really hit the jackpot with this lunatic.
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Acyn
Acyn@Acyn·
RFK JR: One time, Trump grabbed a placemat, turned it over, took a Sharpie, and drew a perfect map of the Middle East. Then he marked the troop strength of every country along each border on that map..
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Ignacio Couce
Ignacio Couce@CouceIgnacio·
Like I said, you’re poorly educated and poorly informed. The only thing close to a dictator we’ve had in this country in recent years, attempted to overthrow the dually, elected president in the United States, based on completely fabricated evidence, and then continued to pursue him in private life after leaving office— again on the basis of ridiculous accusations just so they could call him a felon. I could outline the details of how a 30-year-old he said she said sexual assault allegation, and a misdemeanor accounting charge, was turned into an $88 million civil judgment and 34 felonies, but fax don’t interest you. You’re happy to nurse your emotions and have your a priori biases confirmed. We haven’t forgotten! The Mueller, Horowitz, and Durham reports make clear that multiple news cycles over the past few years were dominated by reports that were either incorrect or lacking factual foundation. These included assertions by multiple outlets that the Steele dossier was not central to the FBI’s efforts to secure a warrant on Page; that the FBI found Christopher Steele and his dossier “credible”; that tales of FISA abuse were a conspiracy theory (one of many claims Mother Jones called “bullshit”); that the memo written by Devin Nunes on the subject was wrong and had been “debunked”; that Russians “blocked” Trump from nominating Mitt Romney as secretary of state; that Trump lawyer Michael Cohen was in Prague (presumably to meet Russian hackers); that a “pee tape” existed; that Russia’s Alfa Bank and the Trump campaign were communicating via a secret server; that the FISA warrant on Page must have been producing good intelligence to be renewed three times; and many other things. “Ultimately, the investigation did not establish that the Campaign coordinated or conspired with the Russian government in its election-interference activities.” (Page 173) justice.gov/archives/sco/f… oig.justice.gov/news/doj-oig-r… justice.gov/archives/sco-d…
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Ignacio Couce
Ignacio Couce@CouceIgnacio·
“Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.” — H.L. Mencken By the way, you’ve never taken the time to actually research what you think you know, which is why you know nothing. The text’s core example—53 Illinois districts with zero math proficiency (and 30 in reading)—is in a Democratic-dominated state, and national data shows the most extreme low-proficiency urban districts cluster in blue-state cities like Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, and Baltimore. While some red states have low state averages, the scale of severe district failures aligns with Democratic strongholds. 😂😂😂✌️
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Ignacio Couce
Ignacio Couce@CouceIgnacio·
@TheDemocrats are “graduating” 60% of high school students miseducated by a liberal-dominated K-12 curriculum, unable to read, write, or solve problems at grade level. Your non-technical college degree is merely remedial high school. When I was in high school, I was writing what today would be considered college-level papers in 10th grade. Of course you’ll probably not read the rest of this post, because focusing your attention for a long periods of time makes you sleepy. The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) provides the most comprehensive snapshot of student proficiency. In 2022, the latest year with full 12th-grade data, only 24% of high school seniors scored at or above proficient in math, meaning 76% were below that threshold. For reading, 37% were proficient, so 63% were below proficient."Proficient" on NAEP aligns closely with grade-level expectations, though it’s a high bar—students below this level may still have basic skills but struggle with grade-appropriate tasks. Now, translating this to school districts is tricky. The U.S. has about 13,318 public school districts (per NCES data for 2023-2024). NAEP data is national or state-level, not district-level, and proficiency varies widely due to local factors like poverty, funding, and demographics. The Education Recovery Scorecard (2024) analyzed 8,700 districts and found that, post-pandemic, students were still nearly half a grade level behind in math and reading on average, with lower-income districts lagging more—often 3-4 times less likely to recover to pre-2019 levels. This suggests many districts exceed that 25% threshold, especially in high-poverty areas. A stark example comes from Illinois, where 2022 state data showed 53 districts had zero students proficient in math at grade level, and 30 had zero in reading—implying 100% were below grade level in those subjects. If we conservatively assume "at least 25%" includes districts where 25-100% of graduates fall short, we need to scale up from such extremes. National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) reports and news analyses (e.g., Wirepoints, 2023) indicate hundreds of districts, particularly urban and rural ones, have proficiency rates well below 50%, often dipping into the 20-30% range for math and reading. Given the national 76% below-proficient rate in math and 63% in reading, and knowing disparities amplify locally, a rough estimate emerges: around 60-70% of districts likely have at least 25% of graduates below grade level in math (roughly 8,000-9,300 districts), and 50-60% in reading (6,600-8,000 districts). Combining both subjects—where a graduate struggles in at least one—could push this higher, potentially 70-80% of districts (9,300-10,600), since math tends to be the weaker subject.
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